Hammond-Beville v. Landis

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Tennessee
DecidedNovember 15, 2022
Docket3:20-cv-00973
StatusUnknown

This text of Hammond-Beville v. Landis (Hammond-Beville v. Landis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hammond-Beville v. Landis, (M.D. Tenn. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF TENNESSEE NASHVILLE DIVISION

MICHELLE HAMMOND-BEVILLE, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) Case No. 3: 20-cv-00973 ) Judge Aleta A. Trauger JEFF LANDIS, KATHY MORANTE, ) RON CARTER, JASON SHARPE, and ) CHEATHAM COUNTY, TENNESSEE, ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM Before the court is plaintiff Michelle Hammond-Beville’s Motion to Amend Complaint under Rules 15 and 20 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. (Doc. No. 55.) Her proposed Second Amended Complaint (“SAC”) is attached as an exhibit to the motion. (Doc. No. 55-1.) For the reasons set forth herein, the motion will be denied. I. BACKGROUND Plaintiff Michelle Hammond-Beville has been employed as a police officer with the Metro Nashville Police Department (“MNPD”) since 2005. She holds the rank of sergeant and, from 2016 until the events giving rise to her lawsuit, was assigned to the Office of Professional Accountability (“OPA”), a division of the MNPD tasked with investigating allegations of serious officer misconduct. (Id. ¶¶ 9, 10.)1 Hammond-Beville filed her Complaint initiating this lawsuit in November 2020 (Doc. No. 1) and a first Amended Complaint (“FAC”) in January 2021 (Doc. No. 16), asserting claims against Jeff Landis, formerly a deputy with the Sheriff’s Office of Cheatham

1 In the proposed SAC, Hammond-Beville states she was promoted to the rank of lieutenant in May 2022. (Doc. No. 55-1 ¶ 185.) County, Tennessee, under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for malicious prosecution in violation of the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution; against Cheatham County, as Landis’ former employer, for vicarious liability for Landis’ actions, under Tenn. Code Ann. § 8-8-302 (Count III); and against Kathy Morante, Jason Sharpe, and Ron Carter, all MNPD officers assigned

to the OPA, asserting a common law claim for malicious prosecution (Count II). Rather than answering the FAC, Morante, Sharpe, and Carter (the “MNPD defendants”) filed a Motion to Dismiss the claim against them on the basis of qualified immunity. After this court denied their motion, the MNPD defendants took an interlocutory appeal. The Sixth Circuit affirmed approximately a year later. Once the mandate issued, the defendants answered the FAC, and the court scheduled an initial case management conference. Before that conference convened, however, the plaintiff filed her Motion to Amend Complaint and the proposed SAC. As a result, the initial case management conference has been continued, to be reset following disposition of this motion. Thus, although this lawsuit was filed almost two years ago, it is procedurally in its infancy, with no case management deadlines even having been set.

The malicious prosecution claims (under state and federal law) in the FAC are premised upon allegations that Landis and the MNPD defendants knowingly subjected Hammond-Beville to baseless criminal charges (Landis) and a baseless internal-affairs investigation (the MNPD defendants) on false charges of child abuse. In addition to those claims, the proposed SAC also states entirely new claims under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (“Title VII”) for sex discrimination and retaliation against a new defendant, the Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County, Tennessee (“Metro”).2

2 The plaintiff identifies the putative defendant as the “Metropolitan Government of Nashville Davidson County, Tennessee” and, alternatively as the “Metropolitan Government of Nashville, Tennessee. (See Doc. No. 55, at 1; Doc. No. 55-1, at 1, 2.) The court takes judicial In support of the new Title VII claims, the proposed SAC incorporates new factual allegations, including allegations regarding the MNPD’s failure to promote Hammond-Beville in 2017 (before the false allegations of child abuse arose in 2018) (SAC ¶¶ 84–95), as well as allegations that, during an OPA interview regarding the child abuse allegations, the plaintiff

suffered disparate treatment, insofar as she was “subjected to degrading, invasive questions that were not germane to the investigation and that would not have been asked of a male officer” (SAC ¶ 137). The plaintiff also alleges that, while the OPA investigation was still pending and she remained on decommissioned status, she was assigned to demeaning tasks that male officers were not required to perform. She also claims that she did not receive hazard pay when required to interact with the public during the COVID-19 pandemic, though a male officer in the same job received hazard pay. (SAC ¶¶ 176–77.) When the charges against her were finally dismissed without a disciplinary hearing (after they had been pending for more than two and one-half years), the plaintiff, rather than being restored to the position she had held prior to being charged, as is “typically what MNPD does for male officers who have been exonerated,” the plaintiff was placed

in a much less desirable patrol position and required to work weekends, even though she had “previously earned the privilege of having weekends off.” (SAC ¶¶ 181–83.) Aside from the new allegations, both the FAC and the SAC include allegations that, for several years leading up to the events at issue in this lawsuit, the OPA had a “de facto practice of tending to protect MNPD staff who held the favor of the MNPD administration, while unfairly prosecuting those officers who did not have such favor” and that the officers thus protected by the OPA “have disproportionately been white males, while the officers whom OPA has unfairly

notice that the municipality’s legal name is the Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County, Tennessee, as set forth in § 1.01 of the Metro Charter. https://www.coj.net/city- council/docs/consolidation-task-force/2014-01-09-nashvillecharter.aspx. prosecuted have disproportionately been those with other demographic backgrounds.” (Doc. No. 16 ¶¶ 51–52; see also SAC ¶¶ 52–53.) The plaintiff also alleges that, during her tenure with OPA, she “spoke out against the practice of protecting politically favored officers and the practice of unfairly prosecuting disfavored officers.” (Doc. No. 16 ¶ 53; see also SAC ¶ 54.) The plaintiff

claims that the MNPD defendants “developed a bias against [her] due to her protests against OPA’s practices.” (Doc. No. 16 ¶ 54; see also SAC ¶ 55.) Under “Count IV” of the SAC, for Title VII sex discrimination, the plaintiff points to the new allegations regarding aspects of her employment while she was decommissioned and after she was reinstated, while also referencing the long-standing allegations that she was falsely charged with misconduct, decommissioned for over two years while those charges were pending, and pressured to resign as evidence of sex discrimination. (SAC ¶ 206.) In support of “Count V,” for retaliation in violation of Title VII, the plaintiff claims that she was subjected to retaliation for “protesting the disparate treatment of herself and other MNPD employees who were not members of the favored demographic class—white males.” (SAC

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Bluebook (online)
Hammond-Beville v. Landis, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hammond-beville-v-landis-tnmd-2022.